The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Rack up win for pipeline project foes

Rack another victory for the foes of the Mariner East 2 pipeline project.

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Delaware County Council Wednesday voted 3-1 to seek bids for a risk assessment study on the massive, $2.5 billion project of Sunoco Pipeline.

When it’s up and running – or perhaps we should state that as if it’s ever up and running – the company plans to deliver as many as 250,000 barrels a day of ethane, butane, and propane liquid gases across the entire width of Pennsylvan­ia, from the Marcellus Shale regions, to a distributi­on center at the site of Sunoco’s former refinery in Marcus Hook.

Opponents don’t think this is an especially good idea, citing the potential for a catastroph­e involving a spill or explosion, especially in light of the fact that the chosen route takes the pipeline through densely populated neighborho­ods, literally right past schools and senior centers.

Unions, lots of elected officials, and the chamber of commerce all support the potential economic benefits of the pipeline, including hundreds of good-paying, familysust­aining jobs.

Sunoco insists the pipeline is being constructe­d and will be operated to the highest standards in the industry.

But the state Department of Environmen­tal Protection shut down all constructi­on on the project for more than a month after finding persistent, “egregious” problems during constructi­on, as well as one incident where the company was found to be using a controvers­ial technique known as Horizontal Directiona­l Drilling in an area where it was not permitted to do so.

Last week it was announced Sunoco Pipeline would pay a $12 million fine; in return the state lifted the ban on constructi­on. Opponents clearly are not satisfied.

Earlier this week officials in Uwchlan Township in Chester County announced they would enforce their local zoning laws in an attempt to halt constructi­on.

The 350-mile pipeline will traverse about 25 miles across the heart of the center of Chester County, as well as another 11 miles across western Delaware County as it snakes its way toward Marcus Hook.

The path is basically contiguous to Mariner East 1, Sunoco’s old original oil pipeline, which has been retrofitte­d and is already delivering much of the same materials across the region.

Delaware County critics have been showing up at county council meetings for the last month, pushing officials to do a risk assessment study on the project, something no one at the state bothered to do before giving the OK to this project, and which officials continue to resist doing, despite persistent pleas from some elected officials and citizens groups.

Council had given an initial OK several weeks ago, before getting bogged down in the details of the study, as well as a little politics.

Wednesday the citizens who oppose the pipeline got their wish.

Republican Council Vice Chairman Colleen Morrone joined Democrats Brian Zidek and Kevin Madden in approving the move to seek bids for the study.

Republican Michael Culp voted against.

Council Chairman John McBlain abstained, noting he did not want there to be any appearance of a conflict since his law firm has done some work for Sunoco Pipeline, although McBlain himself has not.

We still would not bet that the pipeline is going to be happen.

It’s too far along and there is too much money at stake to stop this thing now.

But we’ve been wrong before. And make no mistake, those who oppose it are not going to go away.

Having said that, we still think the risk assessment study is a good thing.

And the process used by Delaware County Council to approve it is even better. Two-party rule. What a concept.

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